That was Eek! The Cat.
That was Eek! The Cat.
Watch the video; wash your hands.
Watch the video; wash your hands.
Watch the video; wash your hands.
the landstander, you know I ain't see no—
That's why the ad campaign said "Hey Dude, this is no cartoon."
And most issues of What If? ended with the world blowing up. And even if it didn't, you could expect Peter Parker to die.
…Isn't that the Dark Tower?
It's economic anxiety. I think this makes Trump a Stephen King monster.
Nothing that includes a scene of Christopher Walken dancing can be entirely dismissed.
The Batmobile shooting a line in the wall that falls over so the Batmobile can drive into the factory was pretty cool to six-year-old me.
The 1989 Batmobile (and Batplane) also missed the point of Batman by including machine guns.
Jason Todd.
They biggest mystery is how it survived the constant danger of being crushed by a dwarf.
Ah, you might be thinking of Howard Porter. He was like a cross between Jim's smooth muscles with John Romita Jr's rectangular muscles.
"Justice League in the '90s?" Lee started as a Marvel guy before becoming an Image Founder. He didn't do a Justice League book until 2011.
At least he kept Jubilee a teenager. Have you seen her lately?
It's from the Jim Lee drawn X-Men trading cards from the early 1990s. Marvel is recoloring all the images and running them as alternate covers on their books right now. So they can advertise "JIM LEE COVERS OH MY GOD!" There doesn't appear to be any logic on which books the covers appear on but they've got 100 images…
When I go to a four-day event, I like to spend the first day sitting around doing nothing but wait for the second day.
Howard Dean is the toughest man in the world.
The classic movie from 1939 was actually the fourth film version. There had already been adaptations in 1910 (based on the play), 1936, and 1933 (animated). Before those three there was also "The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays" which used film, slides and live actors to put on a show. Plus there were three other OZ…
I know that came up in the legal dispute between Kurosawa and Leone but I've never seen the connection other than on the most surface levels (a man secretly serving with two masters). I really don't see a connection between Hammett and the play. Red Harvest is about a man playing the gangs against one another while…